Home » Jazz Articles » Book Review » Don Byas: Sax Expat
Don Byas: Sax Expat
ByDon Byas
saxophone, tenor1912 - 1972

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969

Lester Young
saxophone1909 - 1959

Ben Webster
saxophone, tenor1909 - 1973

Buddy Tate
saxophone, tenorb.1913

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996
When his competitive instincts were arousedand alcohol seemed to intensify themhe could be difficult to the point of being dangerous. He supposedly pulled a gun on

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984

Bud Freeman
saxophone, tenor1906 - 1991
Byas was from eastern Oklahoma, born in 1913, and from a multiracial background that included Native American, Black and Mexican. The surname itself (Byas, like Baéz) is indictive of a crypto-Jewish (Mexican) background stretching well back into the seventeenth century in the Southwest, although the family did not regard it as a selling point in Muskogee. His family was, especially by the standards of the Great Depression, middle class. Byas himself attended Langston University, a historically Black University. Whatever else Byas was, or claimed to be, he was certainly not only musical, but bright. When he moved to Europe, he learned to speak French and Dutch fluently, neither of which is easy, and was thoughtful, articulate and bec fin, if a problem drinker.
Byas came up through a mix of bands including

Eddie Barefield
b.1909
Buck Clayton
trumpet1911 - 1991

Don Redman
arranger1900 - 1964

Lucky Millinder
composer / conductor1900 - 1966

Andy Kirk
drums1898 - 1992

Benny Carter
saxophone, alto1907 - 2003

Art Tatum
piano1909 - 1956
Byas went to Europe after World War II, and spent time in France, Spain, and finally, Holland, where he permanently settled. He had had earlier unsuccessful relationships and a marriage, but he finally married for good and had a family with Johanna Eksteen, a Dutch woman, with whom he appears to have been reasonably content. He never, it is true, made a great commercial success of himself, but neither he nor his wife appeared unduly troubled by that, even if life could be tight. It was seemingly a choice, something along the lines of the now dated saying that "Americans live to work, but Europeans work to live." Byas clearly believed that, and whatever it cost, it cost. Whether he was ever truly at peace with himself and his stature in the world of jazz is another matter. And his troubled relationship with Ben Webster and his occasionally extravagant public behavior surely suggest otherwise. It is not easy being great, but unappreciated. This, to sum it up, was Byas' problem.

Billy Taylor
piano1921 - 2010
It is a complicated issue: not only a personal one, but a stylistic and therefore, a musical one. For one thing, as many students of jazz have observed, it is a small world, and something of a zero-sum game: your success detracts from mine, and there can be only one "best" player at a time. It may be nonsense, but a lot of professions do in fact work that way in the public mind. Chapman says this (p.152), and jazz writer Michael Steinman has made the point repeatedly. "We already got one of those. What's the use of another?" It is, to put it mildly, a simplistic view of looking at the world, but professional athletics and politics are not really all that different. Then there is the whole "swing to bop" discussion. Harmonically, Byas may have been right in there with the most sophisticated bop musicians. But rhythmically, as both Steinman and Martin Williams note, (p.178), Byas did play a lot of eighth notes and phrased in swing eighth notes at that. Listening to up-tempo Byas can be like getting hit by a hammer, rather than the smooth flow of Lester Young or

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Benny Goodman
clarinet1909 - 1986
An interesting portrait of a too little known master.
Tags
Book Review
Don Byas
Richard J Salvucci
University Press of Mississippi}
2025 {{m: Don Byas Coleman Hawkins Lester Young ben webster Buddy Tate Charlie Parker Gerry Mulligan duke ellington Count Basie Benny Carter Art Tatum Billy Taylor Stan Getz Benny Goodman
2025 {{m: Don Byas Coleman Hawkins Lester Young ben webster Buddy Tate Charlie Parker Gerry Mulligan duke ellington Count Basie Benny Carter Art Tatum Billy Taylor Stan Getz Benny Goodman
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
